Well, “doesn’t believe in a system of morality” and “actually acts like a cross between Snidely Whiplash and Lex Luthor” are different things, of course. Which is to say that I think that most people here, even those who don’t have a formal system of morality, probably act in a way that most would regard as moral most of the time. Just a guess, though.
Why do you think this has anything to do with trustworthiness? Building and maintaining a reputation for trust can be a valuable strategy independently of any beliefs about morality. I trust my bank to hold my money (not blind trust of course) but I don’t believe my bank (as an institution) has a moral code or any particular pet theories of ethics.
Moral beliefs are only a small part of why someone may act in a trustworthy manner. However, acting in line with one’s sense of ethics would be an additional incentive to deal fairly. No, it’s not the primary force that makes your bank give your money back to you, that being a combination of reputation, as you say, and the rule of law. All else equal, however, I would expect that someone who believes they should return money they borrow to be more likely to repay a loan than someone who doesn’t.
You’re referring to the 10.9% of LW survey respondents who owned to not believing in morality, right?
Yes.
I think those results were more indicative of people partaking in philosophical foot-shooting than anything else, but your point still stands.
Well, “doesn’t believe in a system of morality” and “actually acts like a cross between Snidely Whiplash and Lex Luthor” are different things, of course. Which is to say that I think that most people here, even those who don’t have a formal system of morality, probably act in a way that most would regard as moral most of the time. Just a guess, though.
For once, an apropos webcomic link that isn’t XKCD.
(Not actually that rare. SMBC links are reasonably common and there are rather a lot of links to other assorted webcomics.)
Why do you think this has anything to do with trustworthiness? Building and maintaining a reputation for trust can be a valuable strategy independently of any beliefs about morality. I trust my bank to hold my money (not blind trust of course) but I don’t believe my bank (as an institution) has a moral code or any particular pet theories of ethics.
Moral beliefs are only a small part of why someone may act in a trustworthy manner. However, acting in line with one’s sense of ethics would be an additional incentive to deal fairly. No, it’s not the primary force that makes your bank give your money back to you, that being a combination of reputation, as you say, and the rule of law. All else equal, however, I would expect that someone who believes they should return money they borrow to be more likely to repay a loan than someone who doesn’t.